Mandeville, S. J. (n.d.). The Travels of Sir John Mandeville. Retrieved from http://www.worldlibrary.org/

Excerpt
For as much as the land beyond the sea, that is to say the Holy Land, that men call the Land of Promission or of Behest, passing all other lands, is the most worthy land, most excellent, and lady and sovereign of all other lands, and is blessed and hallowed of the precious body and blood of our Lord Jesu Christ; in the which land it liked him to take flesh and blood of the Virgin Mary, to environ that holy land with his blessed feet; and there he would of his blessedness enombre him in the said blessed and glorious Virgin Mary, and become man, and work many miracles, and preach and teach the faith and the law of Christian men unto his children; and there it liked him to suffer many reprovings and scorns for us; and he that was king of heaven, of air, of earth, of sea and of all things that be contained in them, would all only be clept king of that land, when he said, Rex sum Judeorum, that is to say, 'I am King of Jews'; and that land he chose before all other lands, as the best and most worthy land, and the most virtuous land of all the world: for it is the heart and the midst of all the world, witnessing the philosopher, that saith thus, Virtus rerum in medio consistit, that is to say, 'The virtue of things is in the midst'; and in that land he would lead his life, and suffer passion and death of Jews, for us, to buy and to deliver us from pains of hell, and from death without end; the which was ordained for us, for the sin of our forme-father Adam, and for our own sins also; for as for himself, he had no evil deserved: for he thought never evil ne did evil: and he that was king of glory and of joy, might best in that place suffer death; because he chose in that land rather than in any other, there to suffer his passion and his death. For he that will publish anything to make it openly known, he will make it to be cried and pronounced in the middle place of a town; so that the thing that is proclaimed and pronounced, may evenly stretch to all parts: right so, he that was former of all the world, would suffer for us at Jerusalem, that is the midst of the world; to that end and intent, that his passion and his death, that was published there, might be known evenly to all parts of the world.

Table of Contents
· THE PROLOGUE
· CHAPTER I. To teach you the Way out of England to Constantinople
· CHAPTER II. Of the Cross and the Crown of our Lord Jesu Christ
· CHAPTER III. Of the City of Constantinople, and of the Faith of Greeks
· CHAPTER IV. [Of the Way from Constantinople to Jerusalem.] Of Saint John the Evangelist. And of the Ypocras
Daughter, transformed from a Woman to a Dragon
· CHAPTER V. [Of diversities in Cyprus; of the Road from Cyprus to Jerusalem, and of the Marvel of a Fosse full of
Sand]
· CHAPTER VI. Of many Names of Soldans, and of the Tower of Babylon
· CHAPTER VII. Of the Country of Egypt; of the Bird Phoenix of Arabia; of the City of Cairo; of the Cunning to know
Balm and to prove it; and of the Garners of Joseph
· CHAPTER VIII. Of the Isle of Sicily; of the way from Babylon to the Mount Sinai; of the Church of Saint Katherine
and of all the marvels there
· CHAPTER IX. Of the Desert between the Church of Saint Catherine and Jerusalem. Of the Dry Tree; and how Roses
came first into the World
· CHAPTER X. Of the Pilgrimages in Jerusalem, and of the Holy Places thereabout
· CHAPTER XI. Of the Temple of our Lord. Of the Cruelty of King Herod. Of the Mount Sion. Of Probatica Piscina;
and of Natatorium Siloe
· CHAPTER XII. Of the Dead Sea; and of the Flome Jordan. Of the Head of Saint John the Baptist; and of the Usages
of the Samaritans
· CHAPTER XIII. Of the Province of Galilee, and where Antichrist shall be born. Of Nazareth. Of the age of Our Lady.
Of the Day of Doom. And of the customs of Jacobites, Syrians; and of the usages of Georgians
· CHAPTER XIV. Of the City of Damascus. Of three ways to Jerusalem; one, by land and by sea; another, more by
land than by sea; and the third way to Jerusalem, all by land